| Fused four-membered rings: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Benzocyclobutene | |||
| Five-membered rings: | Fused five-membered rings: | ||
| Pentalene | |||
| Six-membered rings: | Fused six-membered rings: | ||
Simple aromatic rings are aromatic organic compounds (also known as arenes or aromatics) that consist only of conjugated planar ring systems with delocalized pi electron clouds instead of discrete alternating single and double bonds. Typical simple aromatic compounds are benzene and indole.
Simple aromatic rings can be heterocyclic if they contain non-carbon ring atoms, e.g. oxygen, nitrogen, or sulfur.
Simple monocyclic aromatic rings are usually five-membered rings like pyrrole or six-membered rings like pyridine. Fused aromatic rings like naphthalene or purine consist of monocyclic rings that share their connecting bonds.
The nitrogen (N) containing aromatic rings can be separated into non-basic and basic aromatic rings:
In the oxygen (O) and sulfur (S) containing aromatic rings one of the electron pairs of the heteroatoms contributes to the aromatic system (similar to the non-basic nitrogen containing rings), while the second lone pair extends in the plane of the ring (similar to the basic nitrogen containing rings).
In contrast, molecules with 4n pi electrons are antiaromatic.
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"Simple aromatic ring".
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